explorers: poverty-wb
This data as json
slug | isPublished | config | createdAt | updatedAt |
---|---|---|---|---|
poverty-wb | 1 | { "blocks": [ { "args": [], "type": "graphers", "block": [ { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $1 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_100", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Share of population living in extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_215", "subtitle": "Extreme poverty is defined as living below the International Poverty Line of $2.15 per day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "defaultView": "true", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_365", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $3.65 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in lower-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_685", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $6.85 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in upper-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $10 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_1000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $20 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_2000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $30 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_3000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $40 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $1 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_100", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Number of people living in extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "headcount_215", "subtitle": "Extreme poverty is defined as living below the International Poverty Line of $2.15 per day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_365", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $3.65 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in lower-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_685", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $6.85 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in upper-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $10 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_1000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $20 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_2000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $30 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_3000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $40 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_100_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $1 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_215_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in extreme poverty up to the International Poverty Line of $2.15 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_365_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the lower-middle income poverty line of $3.65 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_685_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the upper-middle income poverty line of $6.85 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_1000_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $10 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_2000_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $20 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_3000_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $30 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_4000_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $40 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_100", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $1 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_215", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in extreme poverty up to the International Poverty Line of $2.15 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_365", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the lower-middle income poverty line of $3.65 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_685", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the upper-middle income poverty line of $6.85 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_1000", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $10 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_2000", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $20 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_3000", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $30 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_4000", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $40 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_100", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $1 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from extreme poverty (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_215", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the International Poverty Line ($2.15 a day).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_365", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the lower-middle income poverty line ($3.65 a day).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_685", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the upper-middle income poverty line ($6.85 a day).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_1000", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $10 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_2000", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $20 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_3000", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $30 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_4000", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $40 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $1 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_100", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $2.15 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_215", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_365", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_685", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $10 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_1000", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $20 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_2000", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $30 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_3000", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $40 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_4000", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Share of population living below a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_100 headcount_ratio_215 headcount_ratio_365 headcount_ratio_685 headcount_ratio_1000 headcount_ratio_2000 headcount_ratio_3000 headcount_ratio_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Number of people living below a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "headcount_100 headcount_215 headcount_365 headcount_685 headcount_1000 headcount_2000 headcount_3000 headcount_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_100_year total_shortfall_215_year total_shortfall_365_year total_shortfall_685_year total_shortfall_1000_year total_shortfall_2000_year total_shortfall_3000_year total_shortfall_4000_year", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices.", "title": "Average shortfall from a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_100 avg_shortfall_215 avg_shortfall_365 avg_shortfall_685 avg_shortfall_1000 avg_shortfall_2000 avg_shortfall_3000 avg_shortfall_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices.", "title": "Average shortfall from a range of poverty lines (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_100 income_gap_ratio_215 income_gap_ratio_365 income_gap_ratio_685 income_gap_ratio_1000 income_gap_ratio_2000 income_gap_ratio_3000 income_gap_ratio_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries.", "title": "Poverty gap index at a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_100 poverty_gap_index_215 poverty_gap_index_365 poverty_gap_index_685 poverty_gap_index_1000 poverty_gap_index_2000 poverty_gap_index_3000 poverty_gap_index_4000", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "Depending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 40% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_40_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 40% of the median income or consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "Depending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 50% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_50_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 50% of the median income or consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "Depending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 60% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_60_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 60% of the median income or consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "Depending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 40% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_40_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 40% of the median income or consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "Depending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 50% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_50_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 50% of the median income or consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "Depending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 60% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_60_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 60% of the median income or consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_40_median_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 40% of the median income or consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_50_median_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 50% of the median income or consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_60_median_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 60% of the median income or consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_40_median", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 40% of the median income or consumption, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_50_median", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 50% of the median income or consumption, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_60_median", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 60% of the median income or consumption, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income or consumption (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_40_median", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 40% of the median income or consumption\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income or consumption (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_50_median", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 50% of the median income or consumption\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income or consumption (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_60_median", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 60% of the median income or consumption\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 40% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_40_median", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 50% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_50_median", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 60% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_60_median", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $1 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_100", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Share of population living in extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_215", "subtitle": "Extreme poverty is defined as living below the International Poverty Line of $2.15 per day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_365", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $3.65 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in lower-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_685", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $6.85 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in upper-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $10 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_1000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $20 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_2000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $30 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_3000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $40 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $1 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_100", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Number of people living in extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "headcount_215", "subtitle": "Extreme poverty is defined as living below the International Poverty Line of $2.15 per day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_365", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $3.65 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in lower-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_685", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $6.85 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in upper-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $10 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_1000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $20 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_2000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $30 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_3000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $40 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_100_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $1 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_215_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in extreme poverty up to the International Poverty Line of $2.15 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_365_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the lower-middle income poverty line of $3.65 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_685_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the upper-middle income poverty line of $6.85 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_1000_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $10 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_2000_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $20 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_3000_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $30 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_4000_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $40 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_100", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $1 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_215", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in extreme poverty up to the International Poverty Line of $2.15 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_365", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the lower-middle income poverty line of $3.65 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_685", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the upper-middle income poverty line of $6.85 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_1000", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $10 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_2000", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $20 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_3000", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $30 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_4000", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $40 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_100", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $1 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from extreme poverty (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_215", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the International Poverty Line ($2.15 a day).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_365", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the lower-middle income poverty line ($3.65 a day).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_685", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the upper-middle income poverty line ($6.85 a day).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_1000", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $10 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_2000", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $20 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_3000", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $30 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_4000", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $40 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $1 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_100", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $2.15 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_215", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_365", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_685", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $10 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_1000", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $20 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_2000", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $30 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_3000", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $40 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_4000", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Share of population living below a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_100 headcount_ratio_215 headcount_ratio_365 headcount_ratio_685 headcount_ratio_1000 headcount_ratio_2000 headcount_ratio_3000 headcount_ratio_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Number of people living below a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "headcount_100 headcount_215 headcount_365 headcount_685 headcount_1000 headcount_2000 headcount_3000 headcount_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_100_year total_shortfall_215_year total_shortfall_365_year total_shortfall_685_year total_shortfall_1000_year total_shortfall_2000_year total_shortfall_3000_year total_shortfall_4000_year", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices.", "title": "Average shortfall from a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_100 avg_shortfall_215 avg_shortfall_365 avg_shortfall_685 avg_shortfall_1000 avg_shortfall_2000 avg_shortfall_3000 avg_shortfall_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices.", "title": "Average shortfall from a range of poverty lines (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_100 income_gap_ratio_215 income_gap_ratio_365 income_gap_ratio_685 income_gap_ratio_1000 income_gap_ratio_2000 income_gap_ratio_3000 income_gap_ratio_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries.", "title": "Poverty gap index at a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_100 poverty_gap_index_215 poverty_gap_index_365 poverty_gap_index_685 poverty_gap_index_1000 poverty_gap_index_2000 poverty_gap_index_3000 poverty_gap_index_4000", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "The data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 40% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_40_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 40% of the median income.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "The data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 50% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_50_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 50% of the median income.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "The data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 60% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_60_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 60% of the median income.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "The data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 40% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_40_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 40% of the median income.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "The data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 50% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_50_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 50% of the median income.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "The data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 60% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_60_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 60% of the median income.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_40_median_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 40% of the median income.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_50_median_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 50% of the median income.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_60_median_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 60% of the median income.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_40_median", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 40% of the median income, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_50_median", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 50% of the median income, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_60_median", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 60% of the median income, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_40_median", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 40% of the median income\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_50_median", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 50% of the median income\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_60_median", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 60% of the median income\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 40% of the median income", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_40_median", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 50% of the median income", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_50_median", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 60% of the median income", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_60_median", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "income_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $1 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_100", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Share of population living in extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_215", "subtitle": "Extreme poverty is defined as living below the International Poverty Line of $2.15 per day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_365", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $3.65 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in lower-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_685", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $6.85 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in upper-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $10 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_1000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $20 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_2000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $30 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_3000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $40 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $1 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_100", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Number of people living in extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "headcount_215", "subtitle": "Extreme poverty is defined as living below the International Poverty Line of $2.15 per day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_365", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $3.65 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in lower-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_685", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $6.85 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in upper-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $10 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_1000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $20 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_2000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $30 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_3000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $40 a day", "ySlugs": "headcount_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_100_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $1 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_215_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in extreme poverty up to the International Poverty Line of $2.15 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_365_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the lower-middle income poverty line of $3.65 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_685_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the upper-middle income poverty line of $6.85 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_1000_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $10 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_2000_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $20 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_3000_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $30 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_4000_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $40 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_100", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $1 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_215", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in extreme poverty up to the International Poverty Line of $2.15 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_365", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the lower-middle income poverty line of $3.65 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_685", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the upper-middle income poverty line of $6.85 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_1000", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $10 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_2000", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $20 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_3000", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $30 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_4000", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $40 a day, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_100", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $1 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from extreme poverty (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_215", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the International Poverty Line ($2.15 a day).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_365", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the lower-middle income poverty line ($3.65 a day).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_685", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the upper-middle income poverty line ($6.85 a day).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_1000", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $10 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_2000", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $20 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_3000", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $30 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_4000", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $40 a day.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $1 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_100", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $2.15 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_215", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_365", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_685", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $10 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_1000", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $20 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_2000", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $30 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_3000", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $40 a day", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_4000", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Share of population living below a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_100 headcount_ratio_215 headcount_ratio_365 headcount_ratio_685 headcount_ratio_1000 headcount_ratio_2000 headcount_ratio_3000 headcount_ratio_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Number of people living below a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "headcount_100 headcount_215 headcount_365 headcount_685 headcount_1000 headcount_2000 headcount_3000 headcount_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_100_year total_shortfall_215_year total_shortfall_365_year total_shortfall_685_year total_shortfall_1000_year total_shortfall_2000_year total_shortfall_3000_year total_shortfall_4000_year", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices.", "title": "Average shortfall from a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_100 avg_shortfall_215 avg_shortfall_365 avg_shortfall_685 avg_shortfall_1000 avg_shortfall_2000 avg_shortfall_3000 avg_shortfall_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices.", "title": "Average shortfall from a range of poverty lines (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_100 income_gap_ratio_215 income_gap_ratio_365 income_gap_ratio_685 income_gap_ratio_1000 income_gap_ratio_2000 income_gap_ratio_3000 income_gap_ratio_4000", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "chart", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries.", "title": "Poverty gap index at a range of poverty lines", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_100 poverty_gap_index_215 poverty_gap_index_365 poverty_gap_index_685 poverty_gap_index_1000 poverty_gap_index_2000 poverty_gap_index_3000 poverty_gap_index_4000", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Multiple lines", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "The data relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 40% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_40_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 40% of the median consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "The data relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 50% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_50_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 50% of the median consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "The data relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 60% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_ratio_60_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 60% of the median consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "The data relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 40% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_40_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 40% of the median consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "The data relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 50% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_50_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 50% of the median consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "The data relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 60% of the median", "ySlugs": "headcount_60_median", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 60% of the median consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_40_median_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 40% of the median consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_50_median_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 50% of the median consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "total_shortfall_60_median_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 60% of the median consumption.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_40_median", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 40% of the median consumption, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_50_median", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 50% of the median consumption, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "avg_shortfall_60_median", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 60% of the median consumption, averaged across the population in poverty.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median consumption (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_40_median", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 40% of the median consumption\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median consumption (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_50_median", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 50% of the median consumption\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median consumption (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "income_gap_ratio_60_median", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 60% of the median consumption\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 40% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_40_median", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 50% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_50_median", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "tab": "map", "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 60% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "poverty_gap_index_60_median", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line).", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "true", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017", "mapTargetTime": "0", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "false" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Share of population living in extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Extreme poverty is defined as living below the International Poverty Line of $2.15 per day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $3.65 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in lower-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $6.85 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in upper-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Number of people living in extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Extreme poverty is defined as living below the International Poverty Line of $2.15 per day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $3.65 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in lower-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $6.85 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in upper-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $1 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in extreme poverty up to the International Poverty Line of $2.15 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the lower-middle income poverty line of $3.65 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the upper-middle income poverty line of $6.85 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $10 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $20 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $30 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $40 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $1 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in extreme poverty up to the International Poverty Line of $2.15 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the lower-middle income poverty line of $3.65 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the upper-middle income poverty line of $6.85 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $10 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $20 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $30 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $40 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $1 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from extreme poverty (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the International Poverty Line ($2.15 a day). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the lower-middle income poverty line ($3.65 a day). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the upper-middle income poverty line ($6.85 a day). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $10 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $20 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $30 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $40 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $2.15 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "Depending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 40% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 40% of the median income or consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "Depending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 50% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 50% of the median income or consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "Depending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 60% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 60% of the median income or consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "Depending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 40% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 40% of the median income or consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "Depending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 50% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 50% of the median income or consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "Depending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 60% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 60% of the median income or consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_headcount_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 40% of the median income or consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 50% of the median income or consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 60% of the median income or consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 40% of the median income or consumption, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 50% of the median income or consumption, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 60% of the median income or consumption, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income or consumption (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 40% of the median income or consumption The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income or consumption (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 50% of the median income or consumption The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income or consumption (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 60% of the median income or consumption The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 40% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 50% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Depending on the country and year, it relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 60% of the median income or consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Show data from both income and consumption surveys", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_ratio_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Share of population living in extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Extreme poverty is defined as living below the International Poverty Line of $2.15 per day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_ratio_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $3.65 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in lower-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_ratio_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $6.85 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in upper-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_ratio_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_ratio_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_ratio_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_ratio_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_ratio_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Number of people living in extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Extreme poverty is defined as living below the International Poverty Line of $2.15 per day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $3.65 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in lower-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $6.85 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in upper-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $1 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_total_shortfall_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in extreme poverty up to the International Poverty Line of $2.15 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_total_shortfall_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the lower-middle income poverty line of $3.65 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_total_shortfall_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the upper-middle income poverty line of $6.85 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_total_shortfall_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $10 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_total_shortfall_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $20 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_total_shortfall_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $30 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_total_shortfall_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $40 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_total_shortfall_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $1 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_avg_shortfall_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in extreme poverty up to the International Poverty Line of $2.15 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_avg_shortfall_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the lower-middle income poverty line of $3.65 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_avg_shortfall_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the upper-middle income poverty line of $6.85 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_avg_shortfall_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $10 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_avg_shortfall_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $20 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_avg_shortfall_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $30 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_avg_shortfall_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $40 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_avg_shortfall_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $1 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from extreme poverty (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the International Poverty Line ($2.15 a day). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the lower-middle income poverty line ($3.65 a day). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the upper-middle income poverty line ($6.85 a day). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $10 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $20 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $30 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $40 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $2.15 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "The data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 40% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 40% of the median income. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_ratio_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "The data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 50% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 50% of the median income. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_ratio_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "The data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 60% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 60% of the median income. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_ratio_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "The data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 40% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 40% of the median income. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "The data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 50% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 50% of the median income. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "The data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 60% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 60% of the median income. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_headcount_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 40% of the median income. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_total_shortfall_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 50% of the median income. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_total_shortfall_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 60% of the median income. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_total_shortfall_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 40% of the median income, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_avg_shortfall_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 50% of the median income, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_avg_shortfall_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 60% of the median income, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_avg_shortfall_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 40% of the median income The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 50% of the median income The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 60% of the median income The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 40% of the median income", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 50% of the median income", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 60% of the median income", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Income surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Share of population living in extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Extreme poverty is defined as living below the International Poverty Line of $2.15 per day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $3.65 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in lower-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $6.85 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in upper-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Share of population living on less than $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Number of people living in extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Extreme poverty is defined as living below the International Poverty Line of $2.15 per day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $3.65 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in lower-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty line of $6.85 per day is set by the World Bank to be representative of the definitions of poverty adopted in upper-middle-income countries. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty: Number of people living on less than $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $1 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in extreme poverty up to the International Poverty Line of $2.15 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the lower-middle income poverty line of $3.65 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the upper-middle income poverty line of $6.85 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $10 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $20 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $30 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is expressed in international-$ at 2017 prices. The cost of closing the poverty gap does not take into account costs and inefficiencies from making the necessary transfers.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $40 a day. This data is adjusted for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $1 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from extreme poverty", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in extreme poverty up to the International Poverty Line of $2.15 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the lower-middle income poverty line of $3.65 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to the upper-middle income poverty line of $6.85 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $10 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $20 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $30 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to $40 a day, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $1 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from extreme poverty (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the International Poverty Line ($2.15 a day). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the lower-middle income poverty line ($3.65 a day). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the upper-middle income poverty line ($6.85 a day). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $10 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $20 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $30 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the 'income gap ratio'. It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than $40 a day. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $1 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_100", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$1 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $2.15 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_215", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$2.15 per day: International Poverty Line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $3.65 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_365", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$3.65 per day: Lower-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $6.85 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_685", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$6.85 per day: Upper-middle income poverty line", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $10 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_1000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$10 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $20 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_2000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$20 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $30 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_3000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$30 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at $40 a day", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_4000", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "$40 per day", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "The data relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 40% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 40% of the median consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "The data relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 50% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 50% of the median consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "The data relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Share of people below 60% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 60% of the median consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Share in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "The data relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 40% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 40% of the median consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "The data relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 50% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 50% of the median consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "The data relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Relative poverty: Number of people below 60% of the median", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "Relative poverty is measured in terms of a poverty line that rises and falls over time with average incomes \u2013 in this case set at 60% of the median consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_headcount_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Number in poverty", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 40% of the median consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 50% of the median consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Total shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1_year consumption_spell_2_year consumption_spell_3_year consumption_spell_4_year consumption_spell_5_year consumption_spell_6_year consumption_spell_7_year income_spell_1_year income_spell_2_year income_spell_3_year income_spell_4_year income_spell_5_year income_spell_6_year income_spell_7_year income_spell_8_year", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 60% of the median consumption. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Total shortfall from poverty line", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 40% of the median consumption, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 50% of the median consumption, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the incomes of all people in poverty up to 60% of the median consumption, averaged across the population in poverty. The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall ($ per day)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median consumption (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 40% of the median consumption The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median consumption (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 50% of the median consumption The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Average shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median consumption (as a share of the poverty line)", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "\"This is the average shortfall expressed as a share of the poverty line, sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than 60% of the median consumption The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.\"", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Average shortfall (% of poverty line)", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 40% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_40_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 40% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 50% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_50_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 50% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" }, { "note": "This data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices to account for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. It relates to consumption per capita.", "title": "Poverty gap index at 60% of the median consumption", "ySlugs": "consumption_spell_1 consumption_spell_2 consumption_spell_3 consumption_spell_4 consumption_spell_5 consumption_spell_6 consumption_spell_7 income_spell_1 income_spell_2 income_spell_3 income_spell_4 income_spell_5 income_spell_6 income_spell_7 income_spell_8", "subtitle": "The poverty gap index is a poverty measure that reflects both the prevalence and the depth of poverty. It is calculated as the share of population in poverty multiplied by the average shortfall from the poverty line (expressed as a % of the poverty line). The chart shows breaks in the comparability of the underlying household survey data over time within each country individually.", "yAxisMin": "0.0", "hasMapTab": "false", "tableSlug": "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_60_median", "Indicator Dropdown": "Poverty gap index", "Poverty line Dropdown": "Relative poverty: 60% of median", "selectedFacetStrategy": "entity", "Household survey data type Dropdown": "Consumption surveys only", "Show breaks between less comparable surveys Checkbox": "true" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017.csv", "income_consumption_2017" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $1 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $2.15 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $3.65 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $6.85 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $10 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $20 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $30 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $40 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $1 a day", "slug": "headcount_100", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $2.15 a day", "slug": "headcount_215", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $3.65 a day", "slug": "headcount_365", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $6.85 a day", "slug": "headcount_685", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $10 a day", "slug": "headcount_1000", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $20 a day", "slug": "headcount_2000", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $30 a day", "slug": "headcount_3000", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $40 a day", "slug": "headcount_4000", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_100_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_100 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_215_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_215 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_365_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_365 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_685_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_685 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_1000_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_1000 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000;1000000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_2000_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_2000 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000;1000000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_3000_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_3000 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000;1000000000000;3000000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_4000_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_4000 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000;1000000000000;3000000000000;10000000000000;30000000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below 40% of median", "slug": "headcount_ratio_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below 50% of median", "slug": "headcount_ratio_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below 60% of median", "slug": "headcount_ratio_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below 40% of median", "slug": "headcount_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below 50% of median", "slug": "headcount_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below 60% of median", "slug": "headcount_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income or consumption. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income or consumption. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income or consumption. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_40_median_year", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_40_median 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income or consumption. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_50_median_year", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_50_median 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income or consumption. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000;100000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_60_median_year", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_60_median 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income or consumption. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000;100000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 40% of the median income or consumption (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 50% of the median income or consumption (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 60% of the median income or consumption (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 40% of the median income or consumption (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 50% of the median income or consumption (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 60% of the median income or consumption (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of 40% of the median income or consumption. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of 50% of the median income or consumption. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of 60% of the median income or consumption. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017.csv", "income_2017" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $1 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $2.15 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $3.65 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $6.85 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $10 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $20 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $30 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $40 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $1 a day", "slug": "headcount_100", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $2.15 a day", "slug": "headcount_215", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $3.65 a day", "slug": "headcount_365", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $6.85 a day", "slug": "headcount_685", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $10 a day", "slug": "headcount_1000", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $20 a day", "slug": "headcount_2000", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $30 a day", "slug": "headcount_3000", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $40 a day", "slug": "headcount_4000", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_100_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_100 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_215_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_215 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_365_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_365 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_685_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_685 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_1000_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_1000 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000;1000000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_2000_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_2000 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000;1000000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_3000_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_3000 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000;1000000000000;3000000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_4000_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_4000 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000;1000000000000;3000000000000;10000000000000;30000000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below 40% of median", "slug": "headcount_ratio_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below 50% of median", "slug": "headcount_ratio_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below 60% of median", "slug": "headcount_ratio_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below 40% of median", "slug": "headcount_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below 50% of median", "slug": "headcount_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below 60% of median", "slug": "headcount_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_40_median_year", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_40_median 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median income. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_50_median_year", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_50_median 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median income. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000;100000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_60_median_year", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_60_median 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median income. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000;100000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 40% of the median income (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 50% of the median income (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 60% of the median income (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 40% of the median income (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 50% of the median income (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 60% of the median income (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of 40% of the median income. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of 50% of the median income. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of 60% of the median income. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017.csv", "consumption_2017" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $1 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $2.15 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $3.65 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $6.85 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $10 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $20 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $30 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below $40 a day", "slug": "headcount_ratio_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $1 a day", "slug": "headcount_100", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $2.15 a day", "slug": "headcount_215", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $3.65 a day", "slug": "headcount_365", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $6.85 a day", "slug": "headcount_685", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $10 a day", "slug": "headcount_1000", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $20 a day", "slug": "headcount_2000", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $30 a day", "slug": "headcount_3000", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below $40 a day", "slug": "headcount_4000", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_100_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_100 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_215_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_215 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_365_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_365 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_685_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_685 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_1000_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_1000 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000;1000000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_2000_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_2000 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000;1000000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_3000_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_3000 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000;1000000000000;3000000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_4000_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_4000 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10000000000;30000000000;100000000000;300000000000;1000000000000;3000000000000;10000000000000;30000000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$1 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_100", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$2.15 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_215", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$3.65 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_365", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$6.85 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_685", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$10 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_1000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$20 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_2000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$30 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_3000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "$40 a day - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_4000", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below 40% of median", "slug": "headcount_ratio_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below 50% of median", "slug": "headcount_ratio_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share below 60% of median", "slug": "headcount_ratio_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below 40% of median", "slug": "headcount_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below 50% of median", "slug": "headcount_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number below 60% of median", "slug": "headcount_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median consumption. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median consumption. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Total daily shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median consumption. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_40_median_year", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_40_median 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 40% of the median consumption. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_50_median_year", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_50_median 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 50% of the median consumption. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000;100000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Total shortfall", "slug": "total_shortfall_60_median_year", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy total_shortfall_60_median 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of 60% of the median consumption. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000;30000000000;100000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 40% of the median consumption (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 50% of the median consumption (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Average daily shortfall", "slug": "avg_shortfall_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 60% of the median consumption (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 40% of the median consumption (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 50% of the median consumption (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Income gap ratio", "slug": "income_gap_ratio_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of of 60% of the median consumption (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_40_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of 40% of the median consumption. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_50_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of 50% of the median consumption. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - Poverty gap index", "slug": "poverty_gap_index_60_median", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of 60% of the median consumption. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_100.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_ratio_100.csv", "income_2017_headcount_ratio_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_ratio_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_100.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_215.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_ratio_215.csv", "income_2017_headcount_ratio_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_ratio_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_215.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_365.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_ratio_365.csv", "income_2017_headcount_ratio_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_ratio_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_365.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_685.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_ratio_685.csv", "income_2017_headcount_ratio_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_ratio_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_685.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_1000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_ratio_1000.csv", "income_2017_headcount_ratio_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_ratio_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_1000.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_2000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_ratio_2000.csv", "income_2017_headcount_ratio_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_ratio_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_2000.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_3000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_ratio_3000.csv", "income_2017_headcount_ratio_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_ratio_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_3000.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_4000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_ratio_4000.csv", "income_2017_headcount_ratio_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_ratio_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_4000.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_100.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_100.csv", "income_2017_headcount_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_100.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_215.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_215.csv", "income_2017_headcount_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_215.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_365.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_365.csv", "income_2017_headcount_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_365.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_685.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_685.csv", "income_2017_headcount_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_685.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_1000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_1000.csv", "income_2017_headcount_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_1000.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_2000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_2000.csv", "income_2017_headcount_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_2000.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_3000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_3000.csv", "income_2017_headcount_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_3000.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_4000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_4000.csv", "income_2017_headcount_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_4000.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_100.csv", "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_total_shortfall_100.csv", "income_2017_total_shortfall_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_total_shortfall_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_total_shortfall_100.csv", "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_215.csv", "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_total_shortfall_215.csv", "income_2017_total_shortfall_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_total_shortfall_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_total_shortfall_215.csv", "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_365.csv", "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_total_shortfall_365.csv", "income_2017_total_shortfall_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_total_shortfall_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_total_shortfall_365.csv", "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_685.csv", "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_total_shortfall_685.csv", "income_2017_total_shortfall_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_total_shortfall_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_total_shortfall_685.csv", "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_1000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_total_shortfall_1000.csv", "income_2017_total_shortfall_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_total_shortfall_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_total_shortfall_1000.csv", "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_2000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_total_shortfall_2000.csv", "income_2017_total_shortfall_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_total_shortfall_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_total_shortfall_2000.csv", "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_3000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_total_shortfall_3000.csv", "income_2017_total_shortfall_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_total_shortfall_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_total_shortfall_3000.csv", "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_4000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_total_shortfall_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_total_shortfall_4000.csv", "income_2017_total_shortfall_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_total_shortfall_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_total_shortfall_4000.csv", "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_total_shortfall_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy consumption_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_1 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_2 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_3 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_4 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_5 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_6 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_7 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8_year", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "transform": "multiplyBy income_spell_8 365", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The total shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a year. This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the consumption of all people in poverty up to the poverty line. However this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Oranges", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;3000000000;10000000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_100.csv", "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_avg_shortfall_100.csv", "income_2017_avg_shortfall_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_avg_shortfall_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_100.csv", "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.2;0.4;0.6;0.8;1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_215.csv", "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_avg_shortfall_215.csv", "income_2017_avg_shortfall_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_avg_shortfall_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_215.csv", "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.3;0.6;0.9;1.2;1.5;1.8;2.1", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_365.csv", "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_avg_shortfall_365.csv", "income_2017_avg_shortfall_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_avg_shortfall_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_365.csv", "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "0.5;1;1.5;2;2.5;3;3.5", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_685.csv", "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_avg_shortfall_685.csv", "income_2017_avg_shortfall_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_avg_shortfall_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_685.csv", "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_1000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_avg_shortfall_1000.csv", "income_2017_avg_shortfall_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_avg_shortfall_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_1000.csv", "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_2000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_avg_shortfall_2000.csv", "income_2017_avg_shortfall_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_avg_shortfall_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_2000.csv", "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_3000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_avg_shortfall_3000.csv", "income_2017_avg_shortfall_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_avg_shortfall_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_3000.csv", "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_4000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_avg_shortfall_4000.csv", "income_2017_avg_shortfall_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_avg_shortfall_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_4000.csv", "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_avg_shortfall_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Purples", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_100.csv", "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_income_gap_ratio_100.csv", "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_100.csv", "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $1 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_215.csv", "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_income_gap_ratio_215.csv", "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_215.csv", "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $2.15 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_365.csv", "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_income_gap_ratio_365.csv", "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_365.csv", "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $3.65 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_685.csv", "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_income_gap_ratio_685.csv", "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_685.csv", "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $6.85 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_1000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_income_gap_ratio_1000.csv", "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_1000.csv", "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $10 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_2000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_income_gap_ratio_2000.csv", "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_2000.csv", "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $20 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_3000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_income_gap_ratio_3000.csv", "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_3000.csv", "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $30 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_4000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_income_gap_ratio_4000.csv", "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_income_gap_ratio_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_4000.csv", "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_income_gap_ratio_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "\"The average shortfall from a poverty line of $40 a day (averaged across the population in poverty) expressed as a share of the poverty line. This metric is sometimes called the \"\"income gap ratio\"\". It captures the depth of poverty of those living on less than the poverty line.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.\"", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_100.csv", "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_poverty_gap_index_100.csv", "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_100.csv", "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_100" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_100" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $1 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_215.csv", "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_poverty_gap_index_215.csv", "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_215.csv", "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_215" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_215" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $2.15 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_365.csv", "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_poverty_gap_index_365.csv", "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_365.csv", "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_365" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_365" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $3.65 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35;40;45;50", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_685.csv", "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_poverty_gap_index_685.csv", "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_685.csv", "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_685" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_685" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $6.85 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_1000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_poverty_gap_index_1000.csv", "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_1000.csv", "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_1000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_1000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $10 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_2000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_poverty_gap_index_2000.csv", "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_2000.csv", "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_2000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_2000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $20 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_3000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_poverty_gap_index_3000.csv", "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_3000.csv", "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_3000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_3000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $30 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_4000.csv", "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_poverty_gap_index_4000.csv", "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_poverty_gap_index_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_4000.csv", "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_4000" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_poverty_gap_index_4000" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The poverty gap index calculated at a poverty line of $40 a day. The poverty gap index is a measure that reflects both the depth and prevalence of poverty. It is defined as the mean shortfall of the total population from the poverty line counting the non-poor as having zero shortfall and expressed as a percentage of the poverty line. It is worth unpacking that definition a little. For those below the poverty line, the shortfall corresponds to the amount of money required in order to reach the poverty line. For those at or above the poverty line, the shortfall is counted as zero. The average shortfall is then calculated across the total population \u2013 both poor and non-poor \u2013 and then expressed as a share of the poverty line. Unlike the more commonly-used metric of the headcount ratio, the poverty gap index is thus sensitive not only to whether a person\u2019s income falls below the poverty line or not, but also by how much \u2013 i.e. to the depth of poverty they experience.\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "RdPu", "colorScaleNumericBins": "10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_40_median.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_40_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_40_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_ratio_40_median.csv", "income_2017_headcount_ratio_40_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_ratio_40_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_40_median.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_40_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_40_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "2;4;6;8;10;12;14;16;18;20", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_50_median.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_50_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_50_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_ratio_50_median.csv", "income_2017_headcount_ratio_50_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_ratio_50_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_50_median.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_50_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_50_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;6;9;12;15;18;21;24;27", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_60_median.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_60_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_60_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_ratio_60_median.csv", "income_2017_headcount_ratio_60_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_ratio_60_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_60_median.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_60_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_ratio_60_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;35", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_40_median.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_40_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_40_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_40_median.csv", "income_2017_headcount_40_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_40_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_40_median.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_40_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_40_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_50_median.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_50_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_50_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2017_headcount_50_median.csv", "income_2017_headcount_50_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2017_headcount_50_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2017_headcount_50_median.csv", "consumption_2017_headcount_50_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2017_headcount_50_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_3", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_4", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_5", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_6", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_7", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Income surveys", "slug": "income_spell_8", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_consumption_2017_headcount_60_median.csv", "income_consumption_2017_headcount_60_median" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_consumption_2017_headcount_60_median" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_1", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_2", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median.\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so by selecting _Income surveys only_ or _Consumption surveys only_ in the Household survey data type dropdown or by clicking on _Show breaks between less comparable surveys_. You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0.0" }, { "name": "Consumption surveys", "slug": "consumption_spell_3", "type": "Numeric" |